The states with the highest concentration of respondents are California, New York, and Massachusetts.

A whopping 80 percent of respondents say the economy is the most important issue of the election, 5 percent say healthcare, 3 percent list education, and 3 percent list foreign policy.

A paltry 28 percent of respondents have donated to a candidate's campaign, with both Romney and Obama garnering 13 percentage points of that total.

In 2008, a similar survey gave Obama the nod 54 to 35 percent over John McCain.

“My explanation [for that Obama win] had always been that the broader industry demographics – GOP-favoring gender/race/wealth – were counteracted by its geographic nexus in Dem-leaning hotbeds like San Francisco and Boston,” writes Term Sheet author Dan Primack.

“Perhaps familiarity trumps ideology this time around? Or perhaps Obama's admonitions of ‘fat cat bankers’ have hit a bit too close to home.”